(Leica M4, 50mm Summicron-M, Tri-X 400, through a rainy windshield)
Tag Archives: tri-x 400
The Angel of Harvard Square
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Taken sometime earlier this year. Rolleicord IV, Tri-X 400. Unknown exposure, but probably 1/250th @ f/5.6-f/8
See more of Blake and his own artwork at his website: http://www.blakebrasher.org/
Goli at Cafe939
I had heard Goli‘s Valerie Thompson perform in multiple groups before (you can catch a glimpse of her from Improv at the Cloud Club) but never in her own; when I heard they were playing at Cafe 939 I knew I wanted to see them! They did not disappoint, and some of their (very smart and fun) songs have been stuck in my head since.
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Bostonist June Photo Walk
Reading on the MBTA
Late Evening at the Public Garden
Musing on film and beautiful machines
A friend asked on Twitter the other day why I seemed to be switching from a very fine DSLR to more and more film. In a nutshell, film and the beautiful machines I use to expose it are more romantic and more involved.
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My main film cameras are a Rolleicord IV and a Leica M4. They’re both older cameras (circa 1953 and 1967, respectively) and extraordinarily well made machines — they feel good to hold and use. When using them I’m more drawn in and involved than I am with digital, and much more than my Canon film SLR which is an autoexposing, autofocusing, autowinding wundermachine.
Working in the darkroom is more of the same – making test strips, choosing your exposure and filters, burning and dodging, then watching your photograph slowly appear in the developer is a very visceral experience.
My DSLR still has its place – some of the lenses for it are unique, and others are ill-suited for a rangefinder or a TLR. Even if I had the unobtainable object of lust that is the Noctilux, the DSLR would still be better for night time handheld photography than the Leica. Each tool for the right job.
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On the subject of lenses, I’m renting a Leica 90mm f/2.5 Summarit-M to try out on my M4. The Leica is a much more discreet camera than the SLRs and their huge lenses are, and I don’t have a longer focal length for it. I’m pretty sure I would enjoy the extra bit of length compared to my 50mm Summicron (which I am) and I was curious to see how this lens handled and drew on the film.
So far I’m very pleased, but when it comes time to buy finding an older, used 90mm f/2 Summicron will probably be more in the character of the camera.